tioughnioga wildlife management area · 2017. 7. 13. · 4 what is a wildlife management area? •...

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TioughniogaWildlife Management Area

Habitat Management Plan

Adam Perry & Mike Putnam Wildlife BiologistsAndrew Drake, ForesterAdam Robedee, Forestry Technician

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Agenda• Overview of Wildlife Management Areas

• Highlights/History of Tioughnioga Wildlife Management Area

• Overview of the Young Forest Initiative and Habitat Management Plans

• Goals and Management Activities for Tioughnioga

• Questions

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What is a Wildlife Management Area?

• To provide & enhance: wildlife habitat wildlife-dependent

recreation• Sporting license

fee/Federal PR funded• Open to the public

Presenter
Presentation Notes
129 properties managed by BoW. 234,000 acres. Wildlife Management Areas are lands that were acquired primarily for the production and use of wildlife, and are managed by DEC’s Bureau of Wildlife. In addition to the 110+ Wildlife Management Areas, the Bureau also manages several Multiple Use Areas and Unique Areas, totaling more than 200,000 acres. The first WMA was acquired in 1927. Open to the public for wildlife-dependent activities such as: hunting, fishing, trapping, bird watching, or wildlife photography

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• 9 counties

• 14 WMAs (53,268 ac.)

• 11 WMAs included in YFI (52,956 ac.)

Region 7 Wildlife Management Areas

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Tioughnioga Wildlife Management AreaOverview: Acquired in 1937 3,744 acres Mostly forested (90%)

Past Management: Extensive reforestation Timber harvests Apple releases Grassland

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Young Forest Initiative• Creating habitat for wildlife

• More opportunities for bird watching, hunting, fishing

• Will evaluate effectiveness of management and adapt if needed

Learn more at:www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/104218.html

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What is a Habitat Management Plan?

• A 10-year plan to manage habitat for wildlife

• Acreage goals for each habitat type

• Guided by responsible management practices

Photo: Mike Putnam

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanMajor Goals: Create 9% young forest Increase shrublands to 8% Increase grasslands to 13% Ensure forest diversity/health

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Tioughnioga Habitat Classification

Forest , 88%

Young Forest, 2%

Shrubland, <1%

Grassland, 4%Wetland Open water

Other

CURRENT

Forest 68%

Young Forest, 9%

Shrubland, 2%

Grassland, 13%Wetland Open water

Other

PROPOSED

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanTarget YFI Species: Ruffed Grouse Drumming areas Mast producing trees for feeding Young, dense forest for nesting

and brood rearing

Photo by Art Kirsch

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanTarget YFI Species: American woodcock

• Singing grounds• Feeding • Nesting/brood rearing• Roosting

Photo: Tom Bell

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanTarget YFI Species: Wild turkey

• Foraging areas• Nesting• Roosting• Brood rearing

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanOther species of interest: Forest-nesting raptors Bats Grassland birds

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanManagement Actions:Forest

• Timber harvests • Non-commercial forest management• Forestry mow

Shrubland• Tree removal, brush hog• Control invasive species• Forestry mow

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanManagement Actions:Grassland

• Clearcut-grade-reseed• Improve quality of existing

Wetland and Pond• Maintain dikes and WCS• Control invasive species• Vernal pools

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Specific plans:

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanNortheast sectionNorthwest section

Southeast sectionSouthwest section

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Tioughnioga: Northwest section

• Multiple treatment types

• Work for both 0-5 and 5-10 years

• Non-commercial work

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Tioughnioga: Northeast section• Some non-commercial

work/apple release

• Grassland conversion projects

• First commercial project of 53 acres to be marked and sold summer 2017

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Tioughnioga: Southeast section• Multiple treatment

types

• Some existing YF

• Grassland conversions

• Apple releases/shrubland

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Tioughnioga: Southwest section• Several apple releases

• Predominately 5-10 years

• Small grassland conversion

• Some existing YF

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Tioughnioga Habitat Management PlanMonitoring Activities:• Before and After Surveys Woodcock (annual) Turkey/ruffed grouse (annual) Songbirds (semi-annual)

• Sensitive Species Surveys Rare bats Woodland raptors

• Vegetative Response

Photo by Mike Palermo

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• Adam Perry, Wildlife Biologist• Andrew Drake, Forester• 1285 Fisher Ave• Cortland, NY 13045• adam.perry@dec.ny.gov• andrew.drake@dec.ny.gov• 607-753-3095

Connect with us:Facebook: www.facebook.com/NYSDECTwitter: twitter.com/NYSDECFlickr: www.flickr.com/photos/nysdec

Contact Information

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Thank you!

Questions?

Survey on the table

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